A GEORGE I PEWTER-INLAID AND BRASS-MOUNTED STAINED FIELD-MAPLE AND KINGWOOD BUREAU-CABINET
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more THE PROPERTY OF THE LATE ANNE, LADY HOLLENDEN VALLEY FARM EDGEWORTH GLOUCESTERSHIRE SOLD BY ORDER OF THE EXECUTORS (LOTS 288-291)
A GEORGE I PEWTER-INLAID AND BRASS-MOUNTED STAINED FIELD-MAPLE AND KINGWOOD BUREAU-CABINET

IN THE MANNER OF JOHN COXED, EARLY 18TH CENTURY, TOP AND BASE PROBABLY ASSOCIATED [SEE NOTE BELOW]

Details
A GEORGE I PEWTER-INLAID AND BRASS-MOUNTED STAINED FIELD-MAPLE AND KINGWOOD BUREAU-CABINET
IN THE MANNER OF JOHN COXED, EARLY 18TH CENTURY, TOP AND BASE PROBABLY ASSOCIATED [SEE NOTE BELOW]
The rectangular moulded cornice above a pair of doors with bevelled arched later plates enclosing three adjustable oak shelves above three oak drawers and pair of candle-slides, the bureau section with veneered top and hinged flap enclosing a fitted interior of pigeon-holes and drawers with rosewood divisions around a central arched door and a slide, above two small drawers and two further short drawers and two long drawers, on elm bun feet, the handles replaced, the feet apparently original, the interior of the upper section probably originally grained
81 in. (206 cm.) high; 41½ in. (105.5 cm.) wide; 23 in. (58.5 cm.) deep
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

This bureau-cabinet is in the manner of the St Paul's Churchyard cabinet-maker John Coxed (fl. 1711-1718) who was established at The White Swan workshop in 1711. He was succeeded there by his widow Grace Coxed and Thomas Woster, a brother-in-law of Grace Coxed's. The workshop seems to have specialised in the making of bureaux and bureau-cabinets. A cabinet discussed by A. Bowett shares several similarities with the present lot: the same configuration of drawers in the lower section, a plain element running along the base of the upper section and no surbase securing moulding. Although the cabinet is known only from a photograph, it is suggested that John Coxed manufactured bureaux and bureau-cabinets using a common lower carcase, which might explain the use of veneer on the top the bureau section of this cabinet. Besides these similarities, Bowett also notes that the crossbanding on the drawers set in slightly from the edge is a feature of Coxed's work (A. Bowett & L. Lindey, 'Labelled Furniture from The White Swan Workshop in St Paul's Churchyard (1711-35)', Furniture History, 2003, pp. 74, 78-79, fig. 8).

Coxed and Woster are often associated with the erroneous term 'mulberry' furniture. This is in fact furniture veneered in maple or elm stained to produce a rich golden tone, possibly to resemble tortoiseshell or marble or perhaps simply decorative in its own right. The use of pewter or some white metal inlay was often also used.

The process of creating this veneer is derived from two methods outlined in Stalker and Parker's Treatise of Japanning and Varnishing, 1688. The chosen veneer (often ash, elm or most commonly, maple), is stained yellow, or possibly red, with Aqua fortis (nitric acid) and then rubbed with 'lampblack' (soot). The acid penetrates deeply into areas of soft grain which the lampblack colours richly, giving rise to a three-dimensional effect. The final stage is to pare back the surface until the desired contrast of light and dark is achieved. For a full discussion of the technique and many of the myths surrounding the fashion of stained ash, elm or maple veneering at this date (A. Bowett, 'Myths of English Furniture History: Mulberry Wood Furniture by Coxed and Woster', Antique Collecting, October 1998, pp. 32-35).

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